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Pasadena is very Baltimore, the Northern part of Pasadena borders Baltimore. The Whole Towson and parts north area is nice but he traffic is a bit annoying. Catonsville, Linthicum, Ellicot City, Severna Park... some of my favorite Baltimore suburbs.

How about the surrounding areas of Baltimore? I'm more of a suburb boy. I drove down to the Lake Shore/Pasadena area once, don't know if that's considered a Baltimore suburb or not, but I liked the area.

As for suburbs, I much prefer the suburbs of Baltimore. Much less crowded and sprawling, calmer traffic, affordable and, depending on where you are located in the suburbs, you're within a decent drive to either Philadelphia or D.C. Plus, you can literally drive 15 minutes north of the city line and be in complete farmland country.

I don't like the competetive rush to get into Government that seems to prevelent in DC. Sure, not everyone is that way, but I can do without the What do you do? Where did you go to school? Where do you see yourself in two years? mentality. Reminds me too much of LA.

I don't like the competetive rush to get into Government that seems to prevelent in DC. Sure, not everyone is that way, but I can do without the What do you do? Where did you go to school? Where do you see yourself in two years? mentality. Reminds me too much of LA.

The whole eastern side of the Washington area is almost as blue collar as anywhere else. Alot of Service, hands on physical labor

I don't like the competetive rush to get into Government that seems to prevelent in DC. Sure, not everyone is that way, but I can do without the What do you do? Where did you go to school? Where do you see yourself in two years? mentality. Reminds me too much of LA.

I don't mind this attitude however D.C. seems to take it to another level. It is very difficult to develop a social network if you aren't at least moderately well connected. Mind you, most of the nation's largest metros will have this same attitude, in my experience.

I prefer D.C. any day. Both D.C. and Downtown Baltimore's traffic design suck, too many one ways, but Dtown B-more sucks way more because the city is sorry and alot of parts are unsafe. As a young college student, there's nothing to do there, but intern. DC has a much better club/lounge scene than Bmore, obviously not important to families. John Hopkins University campus and the Inner Harbor are the only good parts in Baltimore city. I digress, past a couple blocks in any directions outside of these two places, the nice factor dramatically declines and you get blue light districts. I dunno if that area with Falls Road is part of the city, ugh, I forgot the name of that place, but that area is cute and quaint. Baltimore County, on the other hand, has some really nice 'burbs. Towson is upscale now, love that Mall even though I can't afford some sections of it.

Baltimore needs to re-invent itself, gentrify and become a more white collar city. Unfortunately, the run-down areas may need to be bull-dozed.

easier said than done. if it were really that simple. baltimore is making inroads at reinventing itself as a city. just that most of the change is happening within the medical and education fields. it's hard to transition from a strictly blue collar, eat what you kill, kinda town to a white collar, have the maid make it for me city.

i own property in both cities, dc and baltimore. i've lived through the bad years of dc and the horrible years of baltimore. you can't compare dc to baltimore. baltimore doesn't have access to the unlimited (seemingly) funds that dc government does. dc has a specialized police force for everything. baltimore has a sheriff and a police force. really kind of hard to honestly compare the two.

i love the cosmopolitan and diverse feel that dc brings. i also love the down home, true to life feeling that baltimore brings.

if baltimore would focus more of it's development outside of the downtown area, i really think it would grow. the key to dc's turn around was getting more people to buy into the city. let's not pretend that dc was a great place to live 10 to 15 years ago. i remember buying property in dc for 30k.

i think people need to be more honest about this debate. i see a lot of hyperbole in here.

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